Episode 158

full
Published on:

4th Jan 2026

Trailer Kid's Apple Bet: Money Energy Unleashed (Full)

A 6-year-old in a Georgia trailer with no running water bought Apple stock in 1995 and turned $3,000 into life-changing wealth through raw consistency. Guest host Robyn Ivy sits down with Jerremy Alexander Newsome and Dave Conley to unpack how money's energy mirrors relationships—commitment fears, shame around pleasure, refusing to feel rich. They dive into men's healing, why hunger persists amid abundance, reshaping education for creativity, AI's future, and Jerremy’s presidential vision. This one hits different.

Timestamps:

  • (00:00) Special Guest Host Robyn Ivy – Mastering money’s energy
  • (00:52) Host Takeover – Robyn takes the wheel
  • (01:25) Robyn Ivy’s Background – Who she is and why she gets it
  • (03:55) Jerremy’s Relationship With Money & Relationships – Ties to commitment and prosperity
  • (05:54) Jerremy’s Backstory – Trailer park kid, no water, buys Apple at 6
  • (06:28) Early Influences and Stock Market Fascination – Forrest Gump sparks obsession
  • (08:15) Importance of Consistency in Wealth Building – The simple secret that builds riches
  • (17:21) Overcoming Financial Fears – Facing shame and self-trust
  • (21:37) Energetics of Money & Speed – Why cash flows with velocity
  • (27:15) Balancing Rigidity and Flexibility – Rules like an engineer, break like an artist
  • (28:40) Two Wolves: Light and Dark – Feeding both for balance
  • (29:36) Men, Healing, and Leadership – Fixing brokenness to lead
  • (32:50) Persistent Problem of Hunger – Why it lingers amid abundance
  • (36:44) Preparing for the Future with AI – Getting ready or getting left behind
  • (39:41) Power of Positive Thinking and Gratitude – Thoughts shape wealth
  • (56:31) Conclusion and Final Thoughts – Wrapping with Jerremy’s presidential tease

Connect:

🌍 Connect with us: Instagram | YouTube | X

Transcript
Alex:

On this takeover episode of Solving America’s Problems, Jerremy tells guest

Alex:

host Robyn Ivy that a six-year-old kid in a Georgia trailer with no running

Alex:

water somehow bought Apple stock in 1995.

Alex:

[thoughtful] That same kid just revealed the exact same energy that

Alex:

turned three thousand dollars into life-changing wealth is identical to

Alex:

the energy most people bring to their relationships—and to money itself.

Alex:

Robyn Ivy presses Jerremy on how commitment issues, shame around pleasure,

Alex:

and refusing to feel rich even when you are rich keep the money flowing

Alex:

out faster than it ever flows in.

Alex:

Jerremy and Dave sit with Robyn as she flips the script, forcing

Alex:

Jerremy to confront why hunger still exists in a country with

Alex:

billionaires and GLP-1 obesity drugs…

Alex:

Hi.

Alex:

Welcome back to Solving America's Problems.

Alex:

I'm your guest host, Robyn Ivy.

Alex:

Today we're doing something different.

Alex:

I get to interview one of my favorite people of all time, and like a

Alex:

brother to me, Dave Conley, who's living in a support role of Jerremy.

Alex:

And I couldn't be happier to meet you Jerremy and

Jerremy:

Likewise.

Robyn Ivy:

I take over your podcast.

Robyn Ivy:

Thanks

Jerremy:

is.

Jerremy:

It's, yeah, it's gonna be so fun.

Jerremy:

So fun.

Jerremy:

I love interacting with new people.

Robyn Ivy:

Yeah, this is great.

Robyn Ivy:

It's great to do a little bit of a friendly takeover

Robyn Ivy:

of somebody else's space.

Jerremy:

Yeah, likewise.

Robyn Ivy:

So for your listeners who don't know who I am, my name's Robin Ivy.

Robyn Ivy:

I'm a life coach.

Robyn Ivy:

I live here in Rhode Island, but travel around the world teaching and presenting.

Robyn Ivy:

And I'm a medium and intuitive guide and I host the Robin Ivy podcast where

Robyn Ivy:

we talk about navigating change and creating the life you want while you

Robyn Ivy:

navigate the one you actually have.

Robyn Ivy:

We dive deep in all sorts of spiritual conversations.

Robyn Ivy:

I talk about thought leadership and really how to change your

Robyn Ivy:

life from the inside out.

Robyn Ivy:

So this felt like a pretty cool place to talk about solving problems and

Robyn Ivy:

all the things you guys talk about.

Jerremy:

Yeah, absolutely.

Jerremy:

I think blending and co-creating both worlds will be, uh, very magical.

Robyn Ivy:

Yeah.

Robyn Ivy:

Cool.

Robyn Ivy:

Jerremy, when I was in Miami a couple weeks ago with Dave, he said something

Robyn Ivy:

that's like really stuck with me.

Robyn Ivy:

He said, of all the things that he's learned from hanging out with you, that

Robyn Ivy:

you sang to him, that your relationship to money is essentially the same

Robyn Ivy:

as your relationship to everything.

Robyn Ivy:

And that if you figure out your relationship to relationship, then

Robyn Ivy:

your to money will completely change.

Robyn Ivy:

How true is that?

Robyn Ivy:

And tell me about that.

Jerremy:

Radically true.

Jerremy:

Uh, in my opinion, I, I feel like money is a relationship, energy.

Jerremy:

And one thing that I've noticed for some people, not everyone, but a lot

Jerremy:

of people have commitment problems.

Jerremy:

We have commitment issues, so,

Robyn Ivy:

I can't relate.

Dave:

me either.

Jerremy:

Picking something and sticking to it like, all right, cool.

Jerremy:

I guess me and you for a long, long, long time is really, really challenging.

Jerremy:

And.

Jerremy:

For money that oftentimes can feel the same as well, where you get some, but you

Jerremy:

never feel like it's enough and it doesn't stay with you very long because as soon as

Jerremy:

you get it, you pay all the bills, you pay off your debts, you pay all the things.

Jerremy:

And it's like, well, yeah, that's what some I'm supposed to do.

Jerremy:

But then the money doesn't really stay there, just like a relationship might not.

Jerremy:

And you always feel like you're in this circle of the perpetual ness of not ever

Jerremy:

having enough, or the individuals that do actually have plenty of money, not

Jerremy:

recognizing and realizing that they have enough, not feeling like they have enough.

Jerremy:

So it's very much one thing to be rich.

Jerremy:

It's another thing to feel rich.

Jerremy:

It's one thing to have prosperity.

Jerremy:

It's another thing to perpetually create prosperity and to scale it

Jerremy:

and to grow it and to have more of it just like in a relationship, right?

Jerremy:

Having more love and having love expand versus picking someone and

Jerremy:

just dealing with all of their problems again big shifts there.

Robyn Ivy:

Tell me how you know this.

Jerremy:

I've studied both relationships and money in depth very

Jerremy:

closely for a long period of time.

Jerremy:

The relationship piece, more from the study of energy, masculine and feminine

Jerremy:

energy and just understanding to the best of my ability, what embodies an

Jerremy:

individual, what they carry with them from a day-to-day basis, what they

Jerremy:

actually do, what they say, what they use, and what type of energy that is

Jerremy:

holding within themselves and what the purpose of it is and why they're doing it.

Jerremy:

And then also the money piece kind of happened to me and for me, and then

Jerremy:

ultimately through me and the money.

Jerremy:

Understanding money, understanding how it moves was just always fascinating to me.

Jerremy:

I love the stock market since a very little kid and seeing how both

Jerremy:

of them connected was really as I got closer and closer to my wife.

Jerremy:

We got married five years ago in February.

Jerremy:

As that relationship started coming together, it made it a lot more clear.

Jerremy:

'cause she's very much more in your world.

Jerremy:

So she has her doctorate in metaphysics, so she's very, very,

Jerremy:

uh, she's the queen of the Woo, like, as far as you can go into ville.

Jerremy:

My wife is the mayor of

Robyn Ivy:

Yeah.

Jerremy:

and

Robyn Ivy:

Uhhuh.

Jerremy:

learning about her world and, oh, you two will have a blast.

Jerremy:

You two will have a blast.

Jerremy:

So she, she loves it.

Jerremy:

But, and then seeing her, her unique struggle when we met about

Jerremy:

charging money for her services.

Jerremy:

Keeping money, how she did it, how she thought about it, and then just having

Jerremy:

really in depth conversations from someone who's way smarter than I am in everything.

Jerremy:

Uh, and then having this back and forth dialogue of why was she struggling

Jerremy:

with growing her business or making a lot more money, or keeping a lot

Jerremy:

of money or feeling safe around money or feeling safe around men.

Jerremy:

And just having this really cool back and forth and just relaying

Jerremy:

it and tying it all to money.

Jerremy:

Yeah, it's been an awesome, awesome journey for the last five or six years.

Robyn Ivy:

So for my people, Jerremy, who've never heard of you and are

Robyn Ivy:

excited to be meeting you like I am, can you give us a little bit of the

Robyn Ivy:

backstory to put yourself in context?

Jerremy:

Yeah, totally.

Jerremy:

I'll do it.

Jerremy:

And three minutes.

Jerremy:

I grew up in Georgia.

Jerremy:

I lived in a very impoverished place.

Jerremy:

So about as poor as you can grow up in the United States of America.

Jerremy:

I grew up in a single wide trailer tree house.

Jerremy:

With no running water, with no air conditioning in Georgia.

Jerremy:

So it was always hot, it was always sticky.

Jerremy:

Mosquitoes the size of Pterodactyls would

Robyn Ivy:

Uhhuh.

Jerremy:

be my constant companion.

Jerremy:

And I watched a movie for the very first time that changed my life.

Jerremy:

In 1994.

Jerremy:

It was me, my father, and my oldest brother.

Jerremy:

His name is Jerry Roger.

Jerremy:

And we watched the movie Forrest Gump and 80% of the movie Forrest starts

Jerremy:

recounting the story about how he and Lieutenant Dan are investing.

Jerremy:

So he says, Lieutenant Dan invested into some kind of fruit company and said, we

Jerremy:

don't have to worry about money no more.

Jerremy:

So I said, good, one less thing.

Jerremy:

And that just baffled me at that exact moment, that moment in time.

Jerremy:

It was a beautiful paradigm shift.

Jerremy:

'cause I had never ever heard someone say, you do not have to worry about money.

Jerremy:

So I asked my dad, what is a fruit company?

Jerremy:

What's he talking about?

Jerremy:

I have no idea these words.

Jerremy:

And obviously Forrest was talking about Apple.

Jerremy:

They invest into Apple computers.

Jerremy:

And my dad started to the best of his ability explaining what Apple is and what

Jerremy:

the stock market is and what investing is.

Jerremy:

And he told me the a strategy that still works to this day.

Jerremy:

It's in fact probably the easiest way to explain the stock market,

Jerremy:

buy companies that you use.

Jerremy:

Do you understand their products?

Jerremy:

You interact with their money every day or every week.

Jerremy:

And if you continue to like those companies, you keep buying those

Jerremy:

companies, the stock will probably go up.

Jerremy:

And so that advice I kind of carried with me forever.

Jerremy:

So since the age of six, I begged my dad to invest in the stock market

Jerremy:

and he gave me the very, very common answers that most people give when

Jerremy:

we talk about the stock market.

Jerremy:

I don't have enough money.

Jerremy:

I don't have enough time.

Jerremy:

I'm not smart enough.

Jerremy:

Those are the three main ones, right?

Jerremy:

A lot of times it's.

Jerremy:

I just, I don't have any knowledge.

Jerremy:

Like I can't watch the news for 45 hours a day.

Jerremy:

Like, I don't know what you're doing.

Jerremy:

I don't know how to do this.

Jerremy:

And my answer is always, well, it's very easy, right?

Jerremy:

Wealth is second grade math repeated consistently and

Robyn Ivy:

That's good news.

Jerremy:

It is.

Jerremy:

And so once you, but the word is consistent, right?

Jerremy:

It's a repetition.

Jerremy:

It's a repetition.

Jerremy:

So we're all smart enough because Robin, you got an A in second grade math.

Jerremy:

Dave got an A in second grade math when we took in 1912.

Jerremy:

I got a, I got an A in second grade math.

Jerremy:

Um, we all got A's in second grade math.

Jerremy:

Yeah.

Jerremy:

So

Dave:

Ro Robin, we're not gonna,

Jerremy:

Me and

Dave:

here.

Robyn Ivy:

are you gonna do?

Robyn Ivy:

Yeah.

Dave:

a year apart.

Jerremy:

no me and Dave.

Jerremy:

I'd always make fun of Dave.

Robyn Ivy:

was born in 1912.

Jerremy:

Yeah.

Jerremy:

Boy.

Jerremy:

Oh boy.

Dave:

God.

Dave:

All right.

Dave:

I'm going everybody.

Dave:

Thanks.

Jerremy:

but Dave's off the podcast.

Jerremy:

He's leaving.

Robyn Ivy:

This is how you know we're family.

Jerremy:

Yeah, no, I love Dave.

Jerremy:

And so we, we, yeah, I just love the stock market.

Jerremy:

I asked my, like I begged him and begged him and begged him and he eventually

Jerremy:

caved and said, BR buddy, if you bring me some money on match at dollar for dollar.

Jerremy:

And so I went, I picked blackberries and sold them door to door

Robyn Ivy:

Yeah,

Jerremy:

a dollar a bag and made $1,500 in the summer of 1995.

Jerremy:

And my dad borrowed, matched it, uh, borrowed $1,500 from my uncle Billy.

Jerremy:

We bought $3,000 worth of Apple stock in 1995, and ever since then, I have been

Jerremy:

immersed and I've read book, every book I've been to, every class, every webinar.

Jerremy:

I've spent seven hours of my life, probably every day since the age of 12,

Jerremy:

studying and learning the stock market and diving into it and trading it every

Jerremy:

day and interacting with it every day, and helping people from all over the

Jerremy:

world understand it and interact with it, and then grow their wealth from it.

Robyn Ivy:

I think it's so fascinating.

Robyn Ivy:

So like I just said, I'm 51, so five decades on the planet.

Robyn Ivy:

It's so interesting to me how one of us is somehow hardwired

Robyn Ivy:

to turn towards something.

Robyn Ivy:

With great intensity and curiosity that might be a thing that other people

Robyn Ivy:

spend their entire life turning away

Robyn Ivy:

Or

Robyn Ivy:

And when it comes to things like money or metaphysics or politics or solving

Robyn Ivy:

hard problems that feel beyond our own agency, we can either really see that as

Robyn Ivy:

this great opportunity to learn something and to get into that arena with it.

Robyn Ivy:

Or it can be totally the opposite.

Robyn Ivy:

And I love that.

Robyn Ivy:

Now.

Robyn Ivy:

I recognize like nobody has the time to do all of that in every category.

Robyn Ivy:

So thanks for being somebody that does it in that one.

Robyn Ivy:

Because if we all just share those resources with each other, then like none

Robyn Ivy:

of us have to do it at that full throttle unless it's the thing we really wanna do.

Jerremy:

Yeah, totally.

Jerremy:

And to your point I grew up in a cult.

Jerremy:

I grew up as a Jehovah's Witness for

Jerremy:

Far, the vast majority of my life.

Jerremy:

And I would be terrified to talk to you, 15 years ago to talk to anyone

Jerremy:

that's a medium or anyone that works in the energies of something that's not.

Jerremy:

The Bible.

Jerremy:

And it was, uh, to, to your point, like we all have things that we

Jerremy:

love and that we focus on, that we energetically align with.

Jerremy:

And the more that we share that gift through the world, the

Jerremy:

more prosperous we will be.

Robyn Ivy:

Yeah.

Robyn Ivy:

And it's interesting 'cause my dad was a Methodist minister and there was

Robyn Ivy:

something about being born behind what I call like that curtain of Oz and

Robyn Ivy:

seeing that discrepancy between being a human being who's here to preach about

Robyn Ivy:

God and but also not be God himself.

Robyn Ivy:

And that immediate question of huh, you don't seem to be living up to the

Robyn Ivy:

expectations that you're preaching about.

Robyn Ivy:

As no one could, right?

Robyn Ivy:

But at

Jerremy:

Yeah, of course.

Robyn Ivy:

I was like, I'm seeing some gap here in this thing.

Robyn Ivy:

And it really opened up a lot of exploration around metaphysical things.

Robyn Ivy:

at the deepest part of that, I really felt catapulted back into

Robyn Ivy:

Christianity at a very deep place because it's all the same thing really.

Robyn Ivy:

It's all the same thing at the end of the road.

Robyn Ivy:

In my

Jerremy:

Yeah.

Jerremy:

It,

Robyn Ivy:

Love that about that.

Robyn Ivy:

Whether it's the energy of money or the energy of God or whatever

Robyn Ivy:

denominational perspective you hold the holier you get, the truer we get

Robyn Ivy:

with the thing, the pure, the energy, it seems like the better it all goes.

Jerremy:

Yes, yes, yes.

Jerremy:

Yep.

Jerremy:

Yeah, well that's, uh, I'll bring it up Robin, just so that you

Jerremy:

have more of the context as well.

Jerremy:

And for your listeners.

Jerremy:

The whole reason that I feel compelled and moved and guided and

Jerremy:

pushed towards running for president is because of all of this, right?

Jerremy:

Growing up, Joe's witness, that was a big no-no.

Jerremy:

In fact, they keep away from all politics.

Jerremy:

So one of their biggest I guess, core tenets of belief is

Jerremy:

Be separate from the world as much as possible and only interact

Jerremy:

with it like when you're working.

Jerremy:

So it's very, very, very small.

Jerremy:

And I would be asked all the time at 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, what

Jerremy:

are you gonna do with your life?

Jerremy:

And I would have to make up something.

Jerremy:

Because I already knew the answer like since I was a kid.

Jerremy:

Like, why, just like you, oh, you're gonna go play baseball and become a

Jerremy:

professional baseball, or a firefighter or a movie star or actress or whatever.

Jerremy:

I've always knew that the whole purpose of my life, the ultimate

Jerremy:

goal is to serve at that capacity, to be a leader in that capacity.

Jerremy:

And I was always terrified of that.

Jerremy:

So as after I, I was terrified of the distinction and the separation.

Jerremy:

'cause there couldn't be both in that particular religion.

Jerremy:

So once I left the religion and I realized what a great gift it was

Jerremy:

for me, it kept me safe, it kept me protected, it kept me from doing really,

Jerremy:

really dumb things because that's how I learned, I learned through mistakes.

Jerremy:

So I was really mistake free.

Jerremy:

For a vast portion of my life, and I don't really have any skeletons in the closet.

Jerremy:

I don't really have anything to be afraid of or ashamed of.

Jerremy:

There's nothing, I didn't do anything.

Jerremy:

I just played basketball with a bunch of witnesses my whole life, you know?

Jerremy:

So I didn't have any, I didn't have any negatives, uh uh, and I started doing

Jerremy:

a lot of the joda spina meditation work, and that's where I met my higher

Jerremy:

self, or the best version of me, or the most disciplined version of me.

Jerremy:

And every time I interact with that beingness, that meanness I've noticed

Jerremy:

that's what I'm supposed to do is at least really make an extremely valiant

Jerremy:

effort to live the reason I was created, which is to, again, to serve as the

Jerremy:

president of the United States of America.

Jerremy:

And I thought, just my funny belief that every male.

Jerremy:

That was born, had that desire.

Jerremy:

And I was like, man, I gotta compete against everybody.

Jerremy:

Like this is gonna be hard.

Jerremy:

And the more I start talking to people, the more people I realize

Jerremy:

that nobody wants that job.

Jerremy:

It's like seven dumb dudes generally want that.

Jerremy:

So that's why I'm here.

Jerremy:

That's why we're here.

Jerremy:

That's why Dave and I are being putting in so much time and energy and effort

Jerremy:

into creating something incredible.

Robyn Ivy:

And it's interesting when you think about serving at scale, like at

Robyn Ivy:

whatever your definition of the highest level is, the fundamentals and the

Robyn Ivy:

foundational things that it's helpful to really understand whether you are in

Robyn Ivy:

full agreement with them or completely not understanding, the, understanding

Robyn Ivy:

the energetics of money and the pain of money and the joy of money and the

Robyn Ivy:

relationality of money or being able to do that in terms of religious experience.

Robyn Ivy:

Whether you agree with things that are more dogmatic or more rigid or you open

Robyn Ivy:

up to something far more unbounded.

Robyn Ivy:

I think it sets you up well, especially if you're exploring masculine energy

Robyn Ivy:

and feminine energy, because the more we understand about leadership, the

Robyn Ivy:

more we're talking about wholeness.

Robyn Ivy:

And we're talking about being able to access these different parts

Robyn Ivy:

of our own humanity, which we see historically was not the case,

Jerremy:

Yeah.

Jerremy:

Yeah.

Robyn Ivy:

much hiding who they were in hopes that nobody would

Robyn Ivy:

ever find them out, and the level of pressure of imposter syndrome.

Robyn Ivy:

then you play that out at scale in the Congress and the Senate and like

Jerremy:

Huh

Robyn Ivy:

who's ever run, who never wants to admit they smoked weed

Jerremy:

Uhhuh.

Robyn Ivy:

something stupid or learned by any misstep of any kind do they

Robyn Ivy:

really think that we don't know that they had to have missed steps somewhere in

Jerremy:

Yep.

Robyn Ivy:

learn something?

Robyn Ivy:

Or are we meant to think they're just buffoons having clearly no experience

Robyn Ivy:

other than something positive?

Robyn Ivy:

The, I think the veil's ready to drop,

Jerremy:

I love that.

Jerremy:

Yeah.

Jerremy:

That's beautiful.

Jerremy:

Yep.

Jerremy:

I agree.

Robyn Ivy:

Yeah I think there's so much, there's so much liberation in the things

Robyn Ivy:

that at one point maybe feel like they tie us down, and I think that's, I don't know.

Robyn Ivy:

I often think like it was only because I grew up as a preacher's kid, that

Robyn Ivy:

I gave myself the permission to go all the way to the edge of the Woo,

Robyn Ivy:

which I ironically gave me permission to pray a rosary as a Protestant kid.

Robyn Ivy:

I don't I will hope, I will probably pray this rosary every day till

Robyn Ivy:

I die, and who'd have thought?

Robyn Ivy:

But if we're not open to this stuff, whether it's the possibility of becoming

Robyn Ivy:

president or the possibility of leading a family in a different capacity or just

Robyn Ivy:

leading ourself through the world or trying to invest in, in something that we

Robyn Ivy:

don't understand it, what we're here for.

Robyn Ivy:

Right?

Jerremy:

Yeah, I agree.

Jerremy:

Well, let, let's have, I'd like to ask this question, Rob.

Jerremy:

I think it would just be fun,

Robyn Ivy:

Sure.

Jerremy:

As it regards to the stock market.

Jerremy:

Tell me what your beliefs are around it, what fears you may or may not have.

Jerremy:

Just in, in regards to investing in stocks and trading in the markets.

Robyn Ivy:

I tend to go like this and pretend there's no

Robyn Ivy:

such thing as any of this.

Robyn Ivy:

That's been my relationship to all things financial and all things

Robyn Ivy:

relative to financial at all.

Robyn Ivy:

Yeah.

Robyn Ivy:

Yep.

Robyn Ivy:

I

Jerremy:

That's fair.

Robyn Ivy:

nothing to do with it.

Robyn Ivy:

It terrifies me, but I've learned it, it terrifies me from a place

Robyn Ivy:

of not trusting myself, right?

Robyn Ivy:

Like the same fear as an A DHD kid of I'm not gonna figure it out.

Robyn Ivy:

I'm gonna have to know more than I know I'm gonna have to be a

Robyn Ivy:

different person to deal with.

Robyn Ivy:

It took me a long time of working through a lot of that fear and I think

Robyn Ivy:

I still have a long way to go with it.

Robyn Ivy:

But I did get smart enough to get a financial advisor and a bookkeeper and

Robyn Ivy:

offload it, but then it left me feeling like I'm not in relationship with it.

Robyn Ivy:

else is in a healthy relationship with it, which is better than no one being in a

Jerremy:

Sure.

Robyn Ivy:

it.

Jerremy:

Yeah.

Robyn Ivy:

like, progress.

Robyn Ivy:

Someone is in relationship with this, but it also gets to be me one day

Robyn Ivy:

not hoping they're doing a great job.

Jerremy:

Yeah.

Jerremy:

Yeah.

Jerremy:

I agree.

Jerremy:

Well, that's, I, I, I appreciate you sharing that with us, and I think

Jerremy:

truthfully, that's probably most people's.

Jerremy:

Interaction with it, and it's just scary.

Jerremy:

I love your awareness of your like, oh wait, I'm scared of it, because

Jerremy:

it's probably gonna be a me thing.

Jerremy:

And that really is.

Jerremy:

I think beau.

Robyn Ivy:

percent gonna be a me thing.

Jerremy:

Yeah.

Jerremy:

That's beautiful awareness though.

Robyn Ivy:

more potently.

Robyn Ivy:

It's not only gonna be a me thing, it's gonna be a shame thing.

Jerremy:

Yeah.

Robyn Ivy:

It's not.

Robyn Ivy:

It's oh no.

Robyn Ivy:

The only thing I'm ever turning my back on is when it's gonna be a

Robyn Ivy:

shame thing that then is gonna also potentially be compounded with an

Robyn Ivy:

action of consistency thing about a thing I don't feel that much self-trust

Jerremy:

Mm. Love that.

Robyn Ivy:

Yeah.

Robyn Ivy:

Most

Jerremy:

that.

Robyn Ivy:

I'm like, let's go Buffalo towards a storm I'm in.

Jerremy:

Yeah.

Jerremy:

I hope to have more in depth conversations with you about it because I, I believe

Jerremy:

that there's a lot of healing that goes into that journey because the

Jerremy:

more we understand that world, the more we'll understand about ourselves,

Jerremy:

we start removing and working on and healing that shame a little bit.

Jerremy:

Because really a lot of times it's, uh, it'll be linked to the shame of pleasure.

Jerremy:

'Cause that's what, that's one of the things that money brings into our lives.

Jerremy:

It brings a lot of pleasure.

Jerremy:

Uh, it doesn't have to,

Robyn Ivy:

Oh

Jerremy:

it can bring a,

Robyn Ivy:

me that he he has to spend that you, that he has to send, spend a

Robyn Ivy:

certain amount of money just for fun.

Jerremy:

yeah.

Robyn Ivy:

Like one of your rules.

Jerremy:

Yeah.

Jerremy:

WW when people say money that

Robyn Ivy:

that part, by the way.

Jerremy:

No.

Jerremy:

Yeah.

Robyn Ivy:

There's no evidence so far to suggest that I am not good

Robyn Ivy:

at spending it for fun, actually.

Jerremy:

Yes.

Jerremy:

Yes.

Jerremy:

And those, those are both interesting words, right.

Jerremy:

Spending and fun.

Jerremy:

Because, yeah, I, I, fun can be pleasurable, but giving

Jerremy:

money away can be pleasurable.

Jerremy:

Building churches, building schools, building hospitals,

Jerremy:

figuring out ways to circulate it.

Jerremy:

Spit out ways to not spend it, but just earn more of it.

Jerremy:

'cause if you give more, you're gonna get more.

Jerremy:

That's the other beautiful law, right?

Jerremy:

Scriptural law in all text is like, you're gonna be provided for the more you give

Jerremy:

and the more you provide for others.

Jerremy:

And that's just also a beautiful recognition.

Jerremy:

So I think that it's just a beautifully interwoven aspect of our lives.

Jerremy:

'cause everyone needs money, right?

Jerremy:

It's not as important as oxygen, but it's right up there.

Jerremy:

It is really, really close, uh, oxygen and currency.

Jerremy:

And when you start playing in both of those worlds, you will start opening

Jerremy:

yourself up for a lot of opportunity, for healing, for expansion, for growth.

Jerremy:

Because yes to make a lot of money and to keep a lot of money, we have to

Jerremy:

become really, really unique containers.

Jerremy:

We have to be a container of someone that can hold all other

Jerremy:

things as well in our life.

Jerremy:

not only relationships, but also, a assets, right?

Jerremy:

Other assets.

Jerremy:

Not necessarily only physical assets, right?

Jerremy:

Intangible assets, things that we really step out into the world

Jerremy:

and we're ready to be a big, bold beacon and say, Hey, look at me.

Jerremy:

'cause again, that's what money does, is it amplifies everything that it touches.

Robyn Ivy:

Totally.

Jerremy:

Yeah.

Jerremy:

Heck yeah.

Robyn Ivy:

a lot of folks in the financial world talk about how money loves speed,

Robyn Ivy:

Something about money and quickness and I, my coaching practice, when people

Robyn Ivy:

are bumping up against self-trust.

Robyn Ivy:

That tends to be where they then wanna slow down the speed.

Robyn Ivy:

'cause they're like, I don't feel like I can move quick at a place of not trust.

Robyn Ivy:

And I was like, then that's gonna be a real setup when

Robyn Ivy:

it comes to money for people.

Robyn Ivy:

If money loves speed, but not trusting ourselves creates a this

Robyn Ivy:

natural inclination to slow down or stop altogether, then we're also

Robyn Ivy:

financially then energetically putting ourselves in a bit of a pickle.

Jerremy:

Yeah, I love that.

Jerremy:

So true.

Jerremy:

Yes, correct.

Jerremy:

Speed is really what, what speed means, is velocity, and then velocity

Jerremy:

generally also means volatility.

Jerremy:

And so you've heard that phrase before, right?

Jerremy:

The stock market, that's a tons of volatility and people are

Jerremy:

like, oh, it's too volatile.

Jerremy:

Don't put me in it.

Jerremy:

Volatility is incredible.

Jerremy:

If you know where you're going.

Jerremy:

Most people don't know where they're going.

Jerremy:

They don't have the clarity, they don't have the intention to sit down and

Jerremy:

go, okay, this is where I wanna go.

Jerremy:

You live in Rhode Island, so if you're gonna come out here to

Jerremy:

Las Vegas and visit me, you're probably gonna be in an airplane

Jerremy:

that's volatile because it's fast.

Jerremy:

But you're gonna choose that overriding a bicycle.

Jerremy:

And it's because one is extremely efficient and the other one's not.

Jerremy:

I think the speed of money is also characterized by the speed of ideas, the

Jerremy:

speed of intention, the speed of creation.

Jerremy:

I do secretly judge people when I take them out to a dinner or, or a

Jerremy:

lunch on how fast they can order food.

Jerremy:

You know, how, how long they take to just interact with the world,

Jerremy:

how long they take to interact with the decisions to move.

Jerremy:

Because having speed of clarity and speed of intention and speed of thought

Jerremy:

does mean that you are, and you have the capacity to create a lot more income,

Jerremy:

money, current to or opportunity.

Robyn Ivy:

is there any cost to that you've noticed?

Jerremy:

Yes, absolutely.

Jerremy:

Because most people will never make the decision.

Jerremy:

They think they will and then they just go and then they don't.

Jerremy:

Because I've heard

Robyn Ivy:

No, I mean

Jerremy:

ca

Robyn Ivy:

fast, is there to going quickly the opposite.

Robyn Ivy:

Is there any cost to being to, yeah.

Robyn Ivy:

Is there any cost to going that quick?

Jerremy:

I'm sure there is.

Jerremy:

Yeah, I'm sure there is.

Jerremy:

I think probably the cost would be you get too wrapped up in it and you have

Jerremy:

the inability to be, most individuals are extremely good at human doings, but

Jerremy:

they're not very good at human beings, so that's probably ultimately the cost is

Jerremy:

like they don't know how to turn it off.

Jerremy:

And they're always flying.

Jerremy:

They're always moving.

Jerremy:

They're always perpetually just going, and they're never here,

Jerremy:

and they're never in the now.

Robyn Ivy:

Okay.

Robyn Ivy:

So how do you manage that as somebody who's really good with the energy

Robyn Ivy:

and speed and velocity of money, but also is good at the being part I.

Jerremy:

The best answer I have to that question is I have to schedule it.

Jerremy:

And I don't know if that's the right or the wrong way, but I have to put on, I

Jerremy:

have to put on the calendar and I have to tell my brain and my body and my mind

Jerremy:

this, Hey, this is where we're going this weekend or this day or these hours.

Jerremy:

You're going to sit down and do X, Y, z. I go to seminars very, very often.

Jerremy:

We'll ask people, Hey, who here, raise your hand if you ever, if you have

Jerremy:

ever worked for 12 hours straight?

Jerremy:

And everyone's like, yeah, right?

Jerremy:

They like badge of on.

Jerremy:

They're like, I've done that.

Jerremy:

And they get all excited.

Jerremy:

And then I ask, who here has ever prayed for 12 hours straight?

Jerremy:

And all the hands go down and it's just this, it's just really this idea of, Hey

Jerremy:

man, what are you working so hard for?

Jerremy:

Why?

Jerremy:

Why are you spending all this time and energy?

Jerremy:

Like if you just get closer to.

Jerremy:

Whatever ultimate being that you believe in, you probably will be able

Jerremy:

to close the gap between time and space.

Jerremy:

And if you close that gap between time and space, it's probably

Jerremy:

gonna happen for you faster.

Jerremy:

That's one of the things I love about Joe Dispenza.

Jerremy:

When he says, uh, the unknown, like the closer you get to the unknown,

Jerremy:

the absolute unknown the nothingness.

Jerremy:

When you and that nothingness become one, everything in your life will

Jerremy:

manifest into reality instantly.

Jerremy:

For me, that nothingness is everythingness, which is god or the

Jerremy:

universe or love or ultimate perfection.

Jerremy:

And I think that's just such an awesome, awesome realization where

Jerremy:

the closer you get to that, the faster things will happen for you and I

Jerremy:

wanna get there as much as possible.

Jerremy:

So I think that's a, uh, a fun place to play in.

Robyn Ivy:

I heard these these two women, and I forget their names, but

Robyn Ivy:

I, if I'm, if I remember correctly, they work for Harvard and they're

Robyn Ivy:

organizational, psychologists, and they were talking about how, that in

Robyn Ivy:

organizations that people they say slow it down to speed it up, that that was

Robyn Ivy:

like a big business ideology for a while.

Robyn Ivy:

Slow it down to speed it up.

Robyn Ivy:

And they said, no, that's not true.

Robyn Ivy:

Speed it up to speed it up.

Robyn Ivy:

But they said the reason that people don't speed it up in organizations

Robyn Ivy:

is similar to the reason we don't speed it up in our own lives.

Robyn Ivy:

Because if we don't trust the foundations of our systems, of our support networks,

Robyn Ivy:

of what we have in place, she was using the analogy of like a dock pillar where

Robyn Ivy:

like, you're not gonna go running out on the pilings if you don't trust that

Robyn Ivy:

they're in place, but if you know they're in place, you could like haul ass down

Robyn Ivy:

the piling no problem, but without believing that they're trustworthy,

Robyn Ivy:

you're gonna take it much slower.

Robyn Ivy:

And I was like, that's such an interesting thing, especially if we're talking about

Robyn Ivy:

the relationality of the money or our own trust that like we can go fast.

Robyn Ivy:

Because we've got the systems in place because we trust our financial person

Robyn Ivy:

or we trust our knowledge of the stock market, or we trust our ability to

Robyn Ivy:

reassure ourselves if we make a bad move that day and lose money like that,

Jerremy:

Yeah.

Robyn Ivy:

just abandon ourselves.

Robyn Ivy:

I thought that

Robyn Ivy:

An interesting parallel.

Jerremy:

yeah.

Jerremy:

I love that.

Jerremy:

I do.

Robyn Ivy:

How do you set yourself up for the kind of balance of rigidity and

Robyn Ivy:

flexibility that you need to thrive?

Jerremy:

I think that also comes down to, for me, again, again,

Jerremy:

just being extremely clear.

Jerremy:

I think the person that's most clear and the most intentional will

Jerremy:

win the fastest or the most often.

Jerremy:

Perfect example.

Jerremy:

If someone says, Hey, I want more money all the time, like that's

Jerremy:

their perpetual daily mantra.

Jerremy:

I would love to have more money.

Jerremy:

I would love to have more money If you get a dollar that is more.

Jerremy:

And, but they're not satisfied with a dollar.

Jerremy:

So now they're upset.

Jerremy:

And then they get this anger of not being grateful or not being in gratitude.

Jerremy:

And the way I structure rigidity and also flexibility is one of my mantras,

Jerremy:

I think, is follow my rules like an engineer, and know when to break them.

Jerremy:

Like an artist, there's always these ebbs and flows, right where you have to be,

Jerremy:

you don't wanna be the most dangerous.

Jerremy:

Gardener in a war, you wanna be the most dangerous warrior in a garden like it.

Jerremy:

There needs to be this balance.

Jerremy:

I mean, that's what it all always is.

Jerremy:

There has to be some level of equilibrium.

Jerremy:

Another incredible, for me, just parallel that really shifts in my

Jerremy:

life in a huge way, just if not that long ago, three or four years ago.

Jerremy:

I heard the story differently for the very first time.

Jerremy:

The story about the two wolves.

Jerremy:

The, there's this Chinese father, or, you know, speaking to his younger son

Jerremy:

and his younger son's asking about life and death and good and bad.

Jerremy:

And the dad says that every man, every person has two wolves inside of them.

Jerremy:

The light wolf and the dark wolf.

Jerremy:

And the dark wolf is there for destruction and terror and creating.

Jerremy:

Anger and making things happen through force.

Jerremy:

And then the light wolf is happy and joyful and prosperous, and

Jerremy:

they're always battling each other.

Jerremy:

These two wolves are always fighting each other, and the young boy looks

Jerremy:

at his dad and says, which wolf wins?

Jerremy:

And the dad says, whichever wolf you feed the most.

Jerremy:

Now, I had never heard the word the most before.

Jerremy:

I always heard whatever wolf you feed, but in reality, we all have those two wolves.

Jerremy:

We all have to feed them.

Jerremy:

And so I do a lot of work with men because men, the brokenness

Jerremy:

of any country is in direct proportion to the brokenness of men.

Jerremy:

And if men do not have this way to internally heal, to understand and

Jerremy:

to adopt, it's never women who have created this, oh, I'm gonna go start a

Jerremy:

giant war for more land and more power.

Robyn Ivy:

We know it's not us.

Jerremy:

No.

Jerremy:

Yeah.

Jerremy:

It's, it is not women.

Jerremy:

Like it's that internal.

Robyn Ivy:

sure that wouldn't be how we do that.

Jerremy:

We would figure out another way.

Robyn Ivy:

Yeah.

Robyn Ivy:

We're pretty sure we could figure out another path to

Robyn Ivy:

And resolution.

Jerremy:

But really that's a gorgeous recognition that I think

Jerremy:

so many people just skip over.

Jerremy:

It's listen, it's not, it's the dudes like they're the ones

Jerremy:

that are ruining everything.

Jerremy:

If there's something that needs to be ruined, leave it up to a

Jerremy:

really angry, egotistical guy and he'll figure out a way to do that.

Jerremy:

That's the big challenge.

Jerremy:

And

Robyn Ivy:

of two, like now grown men, I also think, boy, without

Robyn Ivy:

the men, like men get a bad rap.

Robyn Ivy:

And I'm always like, I always joke that I'd be the first one Vijo,

Robyn Ivy:

voted off Vagina island because I really stand for men and all that.

Jerremy:

yeah, of course.

Robyn Ivy:

that presence, without that, it would, we would just all be different.

Robyn Ivy:

So

Jerremy:

That's the balance, right?

Jerremy:

That

Robyn Ivy:

important parts of this.

Jerremy:

agreed.

Jerremy:

Agreed.

Jerremy:

And that's the balance.

Jerremy:

The balance is the recognition that we have to be in both places.

Jerremy:

We have to know how to do both things.

Jerremy:

We have to know how to live in the both worlds.

Jerremy:

Men need to learn how to heal deeply and to pull their ego

Jerremy:

out and to pull it into light.

Jerremy:

And also be a protector.

Jerremy:

A protector of women, a protector of children, a protector of

Jerremy:

themselves, a protector of their kingdom, the castle, and they have

Jerremy:

to be totally okay to become more.

Jerremy:

Grace to become more kind.

Jerremy:

And I think having the balance and having the blend between all of those

Jerremy:

things we're talking about, which is really the energetics of spirituality,

Jerremy:

of beingness, of who individuals are.

Jerremy:

And you start blending all of that and putting it into money,

Jerremy:

into investing, into politics.

Jerremy:

That is my four corners of like, I can talk about this stuff all day and

Jerremy:

it jazzes me up and it lights me up.

Jerremy:

'cause I know that there are solutions in this box.

Robyn Ivy:

Yeah, I think that I've noticed with women, a pa the

Robyn Ivy:

pattern of there's a pattern of not feeling safe and not feeling worthy.

Robyn Ivy:

And those two things then ripple out into, that becomes almost like a filter

Robyn Ivy:

through which everything it's not safe to put themselves out there in the world.

Robyn Ivy:

It's not safe to start the business.

Robyn Ivy:

It's not safe to ask for that amount of money.

Robyn Ivy:

then on the guy side, I see a lot of, not enoughness, like it's, I'm not enough yet,

Robyn Ivy:

so I can't, I don't feel good enough about myself, so I can't start the thing, do

Robyn Ivy:

the thing, be humble or be compassionate or open, It's such a shame to me because

Robyn Ivy:

if we could see ourselves from that position, reassure that in each other,

Robyn Ivy:

then just keep going out and doing the thing, our contributions and our, what we

Robyn Ivy:

could create here altogether, the problems we can overcome are it's mind blowing.

Jerremy:

Yeah.

Jerremy:

What problem would you like to overcome?

Jerremy:

If you had to pick one that you could just solve tomorrow, what would it be?

Robyn Ivy:

Hunger.

Robyn Ivy:

Hunger to me, hunger.

Robyn Ivy:

Because if you're hungry, I don't care what plans you have,

Robyn Ivy:

I don't care what, I don't care.

Robyn Ivy:

Everything else, if you're hungry, it's over.

Robyn Ivy:

Not doing anything if you're

Robyn Ivy:

So I don't, yeah, I just, I can't fathom for me how it's 20, 25 and five

Robyn Ivy:

decades later people are still hungry.

Robyn Ivy:

To me, this was a problem that should have been solved by the time I was like

Robyn Ivy:

12 years old or long before I got here.

Robyn Ivy:

So the fact that people are still hungry, the fact that we could have this

Robyn Ivy:

many billionaires and hungry people.

Robyn Ivy:

Something is glitchy in the matrix still

Jerremy:

Y yes.

Jerremy:

And not only billionaires.

Jerremy:

So we have this many obese people in the us

Robyn Ivy:

correct?

Jerremy:

So someone's eating a lot of food.

Robyn Ivy:

have GLP if we have GLP ones and hungry people.

Robyn Ivy:

It's astounding.

Jerremy:

Yes.

Jerremy:

Agreed.

Jerremy:

Like there, like to, to that aspect.

Jerremy:

Like what, how are we getting at this incorrect?

Robyn Ivy:

And I also I looked around my house a couple months ago and I

Robyn Ivy:

thought, wow, this is interesting that you can be overwhelmed.

Robyn Ivy:

I could be overwhelmed by the amount of stuff I have to the point that I'm like,

Robyn Ivy:

I gotta get rid of some of this stuff.

Robyn Ivy:

It's this is a lot.

Robyn Ivy:

And then simultaneously have any sense of lack in my life.

Robyn Ivy:

Like how interesting.

Jerremy:

Yeah.

Robyn Ivy:

things can sit there together.

Jerremy:

Yep.

Robyn Ivy:

Yeah.

Jerremy:

I love that.

Robyn Ivy:

But hunger, to me, it's always hunger.

Jerremy:

Okay.

Robyn Ivy:

else, don't know.

Robyn Ivy:

If you're hungry and you're cold, don't have somewhere to stay.

Robyn Ivy:

But you can always you can find somewhere to stay.

Robyn Ivy:

If you can't eat, if you have nothing to eat, you're, what are you figuring out?

Robyn Ivy:

How about you?

Jerremy:

Love that.

Jerremy:

I think my main, I believe my main focus is going to be to radically change the

Jerremy:

educational system in the US because

Robyn Ivy:

system?

Jerremy:

Come on Robin, let's go.

Jerremy:

Be careful.

Jerremy:

You're gonna enter my best friend status real quick.

Robyn Ivy:

That's

Robyn Ivy:

Yeah.

Robyn Ivy:

Get

Jerremy:

I agree.

Jerremy:

It's

Robyn Ivy:

friends.

Robyn Ivy:

I can come rummage through your cabinets.

Robyn Ivy:

If I need a

Robyn Ivy:

Way,

Jerremy:

cool.

Robyn Ivy:

in the acquaintance level,

Jerremy:

Yeah.

Jerremy:

I want snacks.

Jerremy:

I'm with you.

Jerremy:

I'm with you.

Robyn Ivy:

Get one on the Uber Eats, and we're both grabbing the same, yeah.

Jerremy:

It.

Jerremy:

Love it.

Jerremy:

Yeah.

Jerremy:

I think the, our educational system is killing us.

Jerremy:

And it's making us scared to put kids in school.

Jerremy:

It's making our kids less smart.

Jerremy:

It is making our generation and our populace fatter and larger

Jerremy:

and bigger and more complacent and more docile and less creative.

Jerremy:

And it's helping us memorize things that we never use.

Jerremy:

And I believe that if we sit down and we help our children and we

Jerremy:

help our teachers, and we help our staff become extremely creative

Jerremy:

thinkers, I believe that a lot of our problems do slowly dissipate.

Jerremy:

Just as an example, you mentioned hunger.

Jerremy:

Obviously that is a component of many, many, many things.

Jerremy:

But if you have enough smart people in schools, in high schools, middle

Jerremy:

schools, colleges, universities sit down and go, alright, let's creatively

Jerremy:

think of these solutions and let's really, really figure out how.

Jerremy:

This one company, this one product, this one creation can solve that issue.

Jerremy:

And we are rewarded as a community globally, but also also here in the US for

Jerremy:

just extremely creative thinking often.

Jerremy:

I think that's something that really does make a huge, massive impact.

Jerremy:

And we're not, we're not doing that in school, right?

Jerremy:

Our schools are,

Robyn Ivy:

think it's very difficult to get rid of everything that

Robyn Ivy:

fosters creativity in a system, and then expect the people to

Robyn Ivy:

Side with their most creative thinking.

Jerremy:

Yeah,

Robyn Ivy:

I am like if we don't support creativity anywhere, and if we

Robyn Ivy:

don't cr if we don't support feedback and unique perspective and socra

Robyn Ivy:

conversations, opportunity for people to have various opinions and debate.

Robyn Ivy:

Gosh, gosh.

Robyn Ivy:

Debate, did I say debate in

Jerremy:

Oh, my good.

Jerremy:

Oh.

Robyn Ivy:

my no Lord.

Robyn Ivy:

Yeah.

Robyn Ivy:

What a dangerous concept.

Jerremy:

Agreed.

Robyn Ivy:

How are we gonna do anything creatively?

Jerremy:

Yes.

Jerremy:

Yeah, I'm with you.

Jerremy:

And so I, I can see it extremely clearly is we do make huge changes

Jerremy:

there where we actually have that well, 'cause AI is coming, it's coming.

Jerremy:

And if we don't sit down as a nation and go, alright, AI overlords,

Jerremy:

'cause those, those are the people that Dave battles with every day.

Jerremy:

He battles with the AI overlords.

Jerremy:

If we don't, if we don't start getting ready and prepared as a, as a nation

Jerremy:

and also a civilization for what is coming down the pike in 15 to 30

Jerremy:

years, people aren't gonna have they're not gonna be aware to how to have

Jerremy:

jobs, to how to, to how to create.

Jerremy:

They're gonna be extremely complacent.

Jerremy:

And Wally, the kids show the movie that is wildly accurate and hopefully

Jerremy:

never going to happen, but probably is a 200 year dystopian from now.

Jerremy:

That's gonna start happening if we don't get extremely creative on making changes.

Jerremy:

Now

Robyn Ivy:

and Idiocracy is sad that we just watched that a couple

Robyn Ivy:

weeks ago together in Miami, and I said, because I, he's have you

Jerremy:

it's a documentary.

Robyn Ivy:

no, I, what we said.

Robyn Ivy:

I was like, in what universe is this actually more like how it is?

Robyn Ivy:

And then it is.

Robyn Ivy:

It just is.

Robyn Ivy:

It is so much more like how it is, which is terrifying.

Jerremy:

Terrifying.

Jerremy:

Terrifying.

Jerremy:

Crocs is a publicly traded company now, and that's what they're all the

Jerremy:

people wearing Crocs in the whole movie, and they were doing it as a joke.

Robyn Ivy:

on Friday night and I turned to my friend and I was like, I don't

Robyn Ivy:

know I don't know what drug this is.

Robyn Ivy:

They're on, I don't, I cannot identify whatever substance has run through

Robyn Ivy:

this place that we didn't take.

Robyn Ivy:

Everybody was at a frequency I had.

Robyn Ivy:

I'm like, I don't know.

Robyn Ivy:

I know most of them, and I don't know what this is, but people

Robyn Ivy:

were in some kind of weird of half Kensington, like they were just kinda

Robyn Ivy:

There.

Robyn Ivy:

I'm like, this is not normal, but this is very much like that movie.

Jerremy:

Yeah.

Jerremy:

Yeah.

Robyn Ivy:

Yeah.

Jerremy:

what was your,

Robyn Ivy:

feel like it's a rally cry for people who are excited

Robyn Ivy:

and still wanna make a difference.

Robyn Ivy:

Like, how about now

Jerremy:

yes, agreed.

Jerremy:

Dave, what was your,

Robyn Ivy:

the team now.

Jerremy:

the big one that stood out to you in Idiocracy?

Jerremy:

Dave,

Jerremy:

was it the pro wrestling president?

Dave:

The every piece of that thing is really, this was 20 years ago

Dave:

and here we are living this thing.

Dave:

So it's there.

Dave:

It's bonkers,

Jerremy:

Yeah.

Dave:

think that this is actually happening.

Jerremy:

Yeah.

Robyn Ivy:

the fact that it was 20 years ago is one thing, but the

Robyn Ivy:

fact that it was intended to be the most absurd thing on that would ever

Robyn Ivy:

potentially, ever and ever happen

Dave:

Yeah.

Robyn Ivy:

it, and it's now more not this so alarming.

Jerremy:

Dave, chances we could get the creator writers on the show.

Jerremy:

Just have a conversation with him.

Robyn Ivy:

Dax Shepherd,

Dave:

And

Robyn Ivy:

probably.

Dave:

Mac no, it's

Jerremy:

It is possible.

Jerremy:

I think it's possible

Dave:

It's a mike

Robyn Ivy:

Oh, Mike Judge.

Robyn Ivy:

Got it.

Jerremy:

Do

Dave:

I'll reach out.

Robyn Ivy:

Get on that, Dave.

Jerremy:

Get on it, Dave.

Dave:

more people say yes than not, so Yeah.

Jerremy:

Yeah,

Robyn Ivy:

know.

Jerremy:

that's right.

Robyn Ivy:

Jerremy, what do, when you look at the landscape of your

Robyn Ivy:

life in this financial container, what do people, are people get wrong?

Robyn Ivy:

Like, where's the paradigm shift in that?

Robyn Ivy:

If people are, where are they so close, but getting it all wrong.

Jerremy:

That is a very beautiful question.

Jerremy:

Most individuals, in my opinion, have this extremely u extremely bad belief about

Jerremy:

the co, the combination of time and money.

Jerremy:

And so here's what I mean by that.

Jerremy:

They feel like there is so much time they can do it later.

Jerremy:

And that is true.

Jerremy:

So that that's a truth.

Jerremy:

And since there is so much time and you can do it later, if you start doing

Jerremy:

it now, the later becomes amazing and says you can start whatever you want.

Jerremy:

You can start at 67, you can start at 72, you can start at 84.

Jerremy:

The earlier you start though, the better and easier it becomes.

Jerremy:

That is the truth.

Jerremy:

Most people that I connect with, work with discuss, they go, uh, you

Jerremy:

know, one day, one day, one day.

Jerremy:

And every time I go through my calendar, I never see, one day I see a Monday, right?

Jerremy:

Monday's on the calendar, some days not on the calendar, but

Jerremy:

some Sunday's on the calendar.

Jerremy:

It's like we gotta start doing this as soon as humanly possible.

Jerremy:

'cause you said it, money loves speed.

Jerremy:

Quick, fast example.

Jerremy:

Tons of people will say.

Jerremy:

This is a pretty, pretty open statement.

Jerremy:

I'm not blowing your minds here.

Jerremy:

Apple's done innovating.

Jerremy:

They've created the exact same thing for years, and that company's gonna slowly die

Jerremy:

well for the last two and a half years.

Jerremy:

So if you go back to just July, 2023, I'm just gonna pick a really random

Jerremy:

time that's, relatively relevant.

Jerremy:

July of 2023 on Apple, and until today's price over the last two and a half

Jerremy:

years, apple's up 47% just in value.

Jerremy:

47%. They make $90 million net an hour.

Jerremy:

It's a lot of money.

Jerremy:

It's a lot of money.

Jerremy:

Google is up 85% since April of this year.

Robyn Ivy:

Wow.

Jerremy:

there, there are some companies that we,

Robyn Ivy:

unbelievable because of the messaging that AI's taking over

Robyn Ivy:

and nobody's using Google, right?

Jerremy:

I know precisely, yeah.

Jerremy:

That, that messaging is just wrong.

Robyn Ivy:

how it appears.

Robyn Ivy:

Yeah.

Robyn Ivy:

How.

Jerremy:

It's almost never how it appears.

Jerremy:

Yeah.

Jerremy:

So it's just a really wild and beautiful belief and awareness process

Jerremy:

that when we start looking at and navigating the process, like we need

Jerremy:

to start investing into assets now because you do have enough money.

Jerremy:

If you have a dollar, you have enough money to start investing into assets.

Jerremy:

And if you start now, as in today, buying $1 worth of something and

Jerremy:

you can obviously exponentially it to however much you need to

Jerremy:

or want to, or have ability to.

Jerremy:

But we, we just hired an incredible woman to work with myself and my wife

Jerremy:

and my family to help us out with our time and to give us more leverage.

Jerremy:

And she, uh, her name is Nelly.

Jerremy:

She's really, really sweet.

Jerremy:

And I'm getting her, she just really just started working with us like days ago,

Jerremy:

and I've already given her a Robinhood account and I'm already teaching her

Jerremy:

how to invest into stocks because I know her background and her background is

Jerremy:

an amazing background, but it's one of, I need to work really, really hard for

Jerremy:

money and I need to spend six hours a week and order to provide for my family.

Jerremy:

And although that is a truth, right?

Jerremy:

We can and we should.

Jerremy:

And there, that's an a possibility.

Jerremy:

What if instead of working 60 hours, we hired her for 40 hours and is paying

Jerremy:

her the exact same amount she was making when she was making 60 hours.

Jerremy:

And then I'm also gonna teach her how to make more money by investing and

Jerremy:

taking some of the capital that we pay her and taking a portion of that.

Jerremy:

Obviously we all have bills in life.

Jerremy:

You take a portion of that and you put it into the Googles, the NVIDIAs, the apples,

Jerremy:

the Teslas of the world, and guess what?

Jerremy:

The value of your value, your net worth is going to increase because

Jerremy:

those companies are gonna increase because you're betting on America.

Jerremy:

And I think that's really what people don't understand is when you're

Jerremy:

buying assets you're betting on the largest, most powerful, most profitable

Jerremy:

country that in the existence.

Jerremy:

And if you think that's gonna go away that's fine.

Jerremy:

You're entitled to that belief.

Jerremy:

I'm just telling you that you're mathematically wrong.

Jerremy:

It's not gonna go away.

Jerremy:

It's gonna get bigger.

Robyn Ivy:

it.

Robyn Ivy:

So putting your money somewhere else is like a way to make sure you're right,

Robyn Ivy:

which is a terrible idea if winning that it means you don't have a country.

Jerremy:

Oh my goodness.

Jerremy:

The quote of the date.

Jerremy:

Yeah, that's it.

Jerremy:

What do you like if you're like, no, I don't wanna do that, so I'm just gonna

Jerremy:

put all my money into like this bunker and guns because the zombies are coming.

Robyn Ivy:

Okay.

Jerremy:

So that means you're gonna be fighting zombies in 20 years.

Jerremy:

Like, that sucks.

Jerremy:

Like, that's not a great world.

Jerremy:

Let's, let's prevent that from happening.

Jerremy:

Let's prevent the zombies from attacking.

Robyn Ivy:

direct it towards everybody's wellbeing.

Jerremy:

Yeah.

Jerremy:

There you go.

Robyn Ivy:

Yeah.

Robyn Ivy:

all right, so three things that came up when you were saying that

Robyn Ivy:

is I could feel my own oh, Lord how am I gonna learn everything?

Robyn Ivy:

I would have to learn about this, because this feels like, I don't

Robyn Ivy:

know what it's taken to learn about parenting 24 years deep.

Robyn Ivy:

My friend is a lot, and I'm like,

Jerremy:

Yeah.

Robyn Ivy:

Is it, do I have to that my inner Sisyphus is like, I'm gonna have

Robyn Ivy:

to grab another boulder and hit the road.

Robyn Ivy:

So how can you pacify that fear in me in a

Jerremy:

yeah.

Robyn Ivy:

I am?

Jerremy:

The same way my dad did.

Jerremy:

Where it is as easy as you want it to be that's what investing is.

Jerremy:

You don't have to learn everything to know something.

Jerremy:

You kinda like anything in life.

Jerremy:

I asked you, how can I connect with my dad who's no longer with us?

Jerremy:

There's probably a easier way, a quicker way that you could guide me

Jerremy:

into, and then there's a probably a more in depth way where if I

Jerremy:

needed to go all the way into it.

Jerremy:

So that's, that's with Juujitsu.

Jerremy:

All right.

Jerremy:

I'm a practitioner, juujitsu.

Jerremy:

I love doing it.

Jerremy:

It's an incredible martial art.

Jerremy:

Uh, I'm nowhere close to good.

Jerremy:

Yeah.

Jerremy:

I'm nowhere close to good.

Jerremy:

I'm terrible.

Jerremy:

I'm a 16 year white belt, but I love it.

Jerremy:

It's awesome.

Jerremy:

It's really fun.

Jerremy:

And just like there's levels, there's learning, chess, picket,

Jerremy:

pick anything in life, pickleball, tennis, football, basketball, soccer.

Jerremy:

You can become an incredibly, incredibly proficient at it

Jerremy:

and become a professional, like an immaculate professional.

Jerremy:

Or you can become someone who's aware and.

Robyn Ivy:

But the difference is that with money, if you get it wrong,

Robyn Ivy:

people have a whole lot of ugh, about getting that wrong in a way.

Robyn Ivy:

You don't care if you get the arm bar wrong in Jiujitsu, I think.

Jerremy:

Yeah they, they can, and I think 'cause wrong is back to the

Jerremy:

whole time thing, it's gonna they'll be right if there's enough time.

Jerremy:

Generally I would say 97%

Robyn Ivy:

Ah,

Jerremy:

the time they will be correct over a long enough time horizon.

Jerremy:

And so when you're putting too short of a time horizon, when I first

Jerremy:

started trading and doing the stuff in the stock market and day trading,

Jerremy:

my family literally lit the same week.

Jerremy:

We're like, alright.

Jerremy:

So are you a billionaire yet?

Jerremy:

Like a bi a, a billionaire?

Jerremy:

No, I have started learning finance a week ago.

Jerremy:

And yeah.

Jerremy:

Yeah, it's just, it's just this fascinating asset and it's

Jerremy:

just fascinating realization.

Jerremy:

I do think that really ultimately for all of us having the ability

Jerremy:

for it to make things simple, to make it easy, for me to you, Robin

Jerremy:

would be Yes, baby girl, something.

Jerremy:

Go for it.

Jerremy:

Yeah, of course.

Jerremy:

To make it easy would be invest into companies that you know, that you

Jerremy:

use, that you understand, and it could be any, any amount of money

Jerremy:

that, that's really the quick answer.

Jerremy:

And if you do it repeatedly, it will grow.

Jerremy:

So every time you spend a Netflix account, put the same amount of

Jerremy:

money into the Netflix stock.

Jerremy:

Anytime you buy an Apple iPhone.

Robyn Ivy:

a great idea.

Jerremy:

Yeah.

Jerremy:

Buy some Apple stock.

Jerremy:

Anytime you pull up Google to search, Google, put some money into Google stock.

Jerremy:

Every time you get into it, every time you make a car payment, like

Jerremy:

most people make a car payment to whoever a finance company, Ford,

Jerremy:

gm, Tesla, somebody, Honda Toyota.

Jerremy:

Put a little bit of money into that stock.

Jerremy:

If you use the realization that we can all be owners rather than just

Jerremy:

consumers, your money will grow.

Jerremy:

So that's a very, very powerful statement, but that's a statement of 100% accuracy.

Jerremy:

You're betting on America, America's gonna win by the companies that you

Jerremy:

use, interact with on a daily basis, and your money will grow over time.

Robyn Ivy:

I love that idea, and I really appreciate you framing that in

Robyn Ivy:

a way that's very pedestrian relatable.

Jerremy:

Yeah, sure.

Robyn Ivy:

makes sense.

Robyn Ivy:

It makes sense why we would do that.

Robyn Ivy:

I can hear the kind of flags of social responsibility of where

Robyn Ivy:

do I wanna be investing in that?

Robyn Ivy:

And at the same time, I think if you're using them, then you

Robyn Ivy:

might wanna be checking in with yourself about that anyway.

Robyn Ivy:

If you don't want to be investing in Apple, then why

Robyn Ivy:

do you have an Apple iPhone?

Jerremy:

Come on, champion.

Robyn Ivy:

want to be

Robyn Ivy:

In

Jerremy:

oh.

Robyn Ivy:

then maybe you don't want to put gas in your car.

Robyn Ivy:

Like I, you're accountable to your money.

Robyn Ivy:

You're accountable to your decisions.

Robyn Ivy:

This is life folks.

Jerremy:

Yes.

Jerremy:

And yes.

Jerremy:

Drink Starbucks or someone else.

Jerremy:

It's up to you.

Jerremy:

You're all making decisions.

Jerremy:

We're all making choices.

Jerremy:

And exactly what you said, we make the social determination and what's

Jerremy:

responsible and what is valuable for us.

Jerremy:

As an example, I do not personally invest into oil companies.

Jerremy:

Why?

Jerremy:

I just think it's dirty.

Jerremy:

That's all.

Jerremy:

That's it.

Jerremy:

I just, it is physically not clean.

Jerremy:

So if there's someone comes into my house and spills a bunch of oil on

Jerremy:

the floor, I'm gonna notice it, right?

Jerremy:

That's all.

Jerremy:

I just don't think it's super, super clean.

Jerremy:

So I also do invest in renewable energy systems, right?

Jerremy:

So I have large investments into solar, into solar companies,

Jerremy:

into solar technology, because.

Jerremy:

To me in my, I have no clue how Solar Works.

Jerremy:

Couldn't explain it.

Jerremy:

No idea.

Jerremy:

I don't know how my cell phone works really.

Jerremy:

Like I just click a button and it things happen.

Jerremy:

I, how are we not all using the sun?

Jerremy:

I haven't learned that yet.

Jerremy:

I No clue.

Jerremy:

Can't figure it out.

Jerremy:

It's just this free energy source that just hangs out there.

Jerremy:

No one has to pay for.

Jerremy:

We just boop, put on Bang energy.

Jerremy:

It is kind of mind blowing to me that we don't do that.

Jerremy:

And it's not because oil is gonna run out and there's a finite supply and

Jerremy:

there's only a little bit, and that I don't even come from it from that

Jerremy:

perspective, I come from the perspective of there's people that have to work really

Jerremy:

hard and tirelessly to do all of those things that need to be done for oil.

Jerremy:

Where you have this ginormous thing.

Robyn Ivy:

ways.

Jerremy:

Yeah.

Jerremy:

Hello.

Jerremy:

And you could just create solar energy for everyone.

Jerremy:

Go, you, we, Robin, we can go to the corner of, of Utah or Nevada.

Jerremy:

And take out the whole corner of the state and, 500,000 acres in solar field

Jerremy:

and all of America's powered by solar.

Jerremy:

That's all it would take.

Jerremy:

That's a

Robyn Ivy:

you see the level of innovation that they have, but it's, again, it goes

Robyn Ivy:

right back to the willingness to think creatively, to problem solve with a way

Robyn Ivy:

that keeps everybody, it's not a communist idea to consider everybody's wellbeing

Robyn Ivy:

when your amount of land is finite, but it's, it's easy to prepare it that way

Robyn Ivy:

here, but it's a matter of understanding The resources are limited and

Jerremy:

Yeah.

Robyn Ivy:

need is different.

Robyn Ivy:

Like great.

Robyn Ivy:

Use 'em as parking lot cover.

Robyn Ivy:

Why not

Jerremy:

Yes.

Robyn Ivy:

wants their car to be cool anyway.

Jerremy:

Agreed.

Jerremy:

Yep.

Jerremy:

Precisely.

Jerremy:

And I think that those are just, anyway, like that's things for me to

Jerremy:

understand and be aware of is it has nothing to do with certain beliefs.

Jerremy:

It has everything to do with, I want things to be easy,

Jerremy:

fast, efficient, simple.

Jerremy:

And the faster we get there as a society and the more we think about it and the

Jerremy:

more we debate and have open discussions where I can just simply disagree with

Jerremy:

you, like me and Dave don't agree on everything, although we agree on a

Jerremy:

lot of things we can have a beautiful, very easy commonality where it's like,

Jerremy:

oh, cool, man, I think you're wrong.

Jerremy:

And you think I'm wrong.

Jerremy:

And high five, dude, it's love you.

Jerremy:

You're awesome.

Jerremy:

But that's like playing poker or playing chess or playing a sport.

Jerremy:

There will be a loser.

Jerremy:

It's okay.

Jerremy:

It's not, doesn't mean that you're a bad person.

Jerremy:

It means that you played a game over a period of time and someone

Jerremy:

lost because of the result was you lost and someone else won.

Jerremy:

That is all right.

Jerremy:

It's okay for that to happen.

Robyn Ivy:

Yeah.

Robyn Ivy:

I really value multiple perspectives.

Robyn Ivy:

I spent 30 years as a commercial photographer, and the entire career is

Robyn Ivy:

essentially wrapped around the idea that there is no one way to look at anything.

Robyn Ivy:

And in fact, if you're only looking at it one way, you're really

Robyn Ivy:

missing 99% of other possibilities of how to see something.

Robyn Ivy:

it's true about ourselves.

Robyn Ivy:

It's true about what we think is possible with our money.

Robyn Ivy:

If you are also in your fifties, like I learned when I inherited

Robyn Ivy:

some money a handful of years ago, it's like you can start at any time.

Robyn Ivy:

Like you, your own thinking about money or your ability to

Robyn Ivy:

invest is the only limitation.

Robyn Ivy:

Because if you tell yourself that, you're gonna have to pick up the

Robyn Ivy:

Boulder and start going, that's also just a thought you're having.

Robyn Ivy:

It's not necessarily how it has to be.

Robyn Ivy:

That's just one thought you chose to have about what it would be like

Robyn Ivy:

to start getting healthy with money.

Robyn Ivy:

But that

Robyn Ivy:

To change as I'm gonna not have ice cream at 10 o'clock in the morning.

Robyn Ivy:

It's

Jerremy:

Or at night.

Robyn Ivy:

Yeah.

Robyn Ivy:

Or whenever.

Robyn Ivy:

Yeah.

Robyn Ivy:

Or you

Jerremy:

Yeah.

Robyn Ivy:

however.

Jerremy:

Exactly.

Robyn Ivy:

knowing that we're really like a few thoughts away

Robyn Ivy:

from it not being a problem.

Robyn Ivy:

I,

Jerremy:

Yeah.

Jerremy:

Precisely.

Jerremy:

I, I'm gonna openly share this with all of your listeners too.

Jerremy:

The week of like, Christmas week, I'm, I'm, I just eat cookies

Jerremy:

and sugar and just get fat and just do nothing for a long time.

Jerremy:

I like it.

Jerremy:

I enjoy it.

Jerremy:

But again, to the point of, I think it should be absolutely okay where we

Jerremy:

all can just sit down and just relax and have a good time and do our thing.

Jerremy:

But that's balance.

Jerremy:

That's the, you can schedule it.

Jerremy:

That's the creation ahead of time.

Jerremy:

That's the thought process ahead of time.

Jerremy:

That's what all these conversations are almost always gonna keep coming back to

Jerremy:

is clarity of time, clarity of purpose, clarity of intentionality, knowing how

Jerremy:

to sit down, think and grow rich, right?

Jerremy:

The book is not called Work Harder to Make More Money.

Jerremy:

It's called Think and Grow Rich.

Jerremy:

And so we have to be able to use our thoughts and our

Jerremy:

thoughts can become things.

Jerremy:

And if thoughts become things, then our words create our world.

Jerremy:

And that's why I think it's called Universe, right?

Jerremy:

You are the verses that we speak out loud.

Jerremy:

So if you start speaking to yourself, I do love money.

Jerremy:

Money is incredible.

Jerremy:

What an amazing tool that money is for myself and for my family.

Jerremy:

I want to interact with it and grow it and expand it because it's so awesome and it's

Jerremy:

incredible everything that it does for me.

Jerremy:

You start speaking like that and using those words often daily,

Jerremy:

guess what's gonna happen?

Jerremy:

You're gonna start having a better relationship with money

Jerremy:

and your wealth is going to grow.

Robyn Ivy:

And noticing, I mean, no matter what your circumstances are right now,

Robyn Ivy:

noticing the abundance of blessings.

Robyn Ivy:

And I don't mean that in some kind of like hashtag blessed silliness.

Robyn Ivy:

Truly looking around on a cold day and recognizing like, you are lucky

Robyn Ivy:

enough to have a warm place to be.

Robyn Ivy:

You do have someone to call.

Robyn Ivy:

There is something to eat in the fridge.

Robyn Ivy:

There is, we're so resourced in ways that we just don't say thank you enough.

Robyn Ivy:

If any of this were to go, we'd care about it.

Robyn Ivy:

So in the moment that we have it, it's really a practice.

Robyn Ivy:

I think it's a devotional practice to just say, I'm gonna be as

Robyn Ivy:

consistent with my acknowledgement of this as I am of the lack of it.

Robyn Ivy:

You spent all this time being aware of what's not here.

Robyn Ivy:

What about the practice of thank you for what is here.

Robyn Ivy:

You for what is here.

Jerremy:

Yes.

Jerremy:

You appreciate appreciates as Oprah Winfrey said.

Jerremy:

So you don't pray or ask or hope from a place of want of I have less.

Jerremy:

It's not from a place of lack.

Jerremy:

It's from a place of love.

Jerremy:

Thank you for what I have.

Jerremy:

I would love more.

Jerremy:

It's a powerful statement.

Jerremy:

I love what I have.

Jerremy:

It's incredible.

Jerremy:

I want more.

Jerremy:

And it doesn't have to be for you.

Jerremy:

You can have more.

Jerremy:

I want more from my cell phone.

Robyn Ivy:

resourced

Robyn Ivy:

We feel the easier it is to give it away.

Jerremy:

Let's go.

Robyn Ivy:

on what we don't have, we're not gonna be giving that much.

Jerremy:

Yes.

Jerremy:

Yes.

Jerremy:

And that's, I love those conversations because I do get a little slack sometimes

Jerremy:

when I get on stage and I say, you're selfish if you do not make enough money.

Jerremy:

Because who are you really, truly, ultimately providing for?

Jerremy:

If you make $40,000 a year and hey, no hate on it.

Jerremy:

I've, I was there for a long time in my life, right?

Jerremy:

The first 20 years of my life, 19 years of my life, guess who I was helping?

Jerremy:

No one.

Jerremy:

I mean, maybe I would tip a waitress 15%, 10%, but probably not.

Jerremy:

I would find ways to kind of skirt around tips, and I would do things

Jerremy:

that I, I didn't have that much money, so I couldn't circulate it.

Jerremy:

I didn't ever go to

Jerremy:

Charity galas.

Jerremy:

I never donated money ever to anyone for any reason.

Jerremy:

I didn't have any, so it's okay to go.

Jerremy:

I love what I have.

Jerremy:

I love my $48,000 a year.

Jerremy:

This is amazing.

Jerremy:

Thank you.

Jerremy:

God.

Jerremy:

Give me more.

Jerremy:

I know there's some available, I know there's more available.

Jerremy:

Let me figure out how.

Jerremy:

Gimme the insight, gimme the wisdom, gimme the knowledge, the path,

Jerremy:

the opportunities, the blessings.

Jerremy:

Give me more because I know more is available.

Robyn Ivy:

I love it.

Jerremy:

Yeah.

Robyn Ivy:

because otherwise what are we doing?

Robyn Ivy:

Yeah.

Robyn Ivy:

Yeah.

Robyn Ivy:

Cool.

Robyn Ivy:

Jerremy, where can people find out more about you and learn more

Robyn Ivy:

about you and connect with you?

Jerremy:

I have an awesome social media team.

Jerremy:

If anybody connects with me, they could reach out.

Jerremy:

Jerremy Newsome on all platforms.

Jerremy:

My name is built with two Rs, so my dad's name was Jerry

Jerremy:

and stands for Jerry and me.

Jerremy:

Jerremy and for my podcast solving America's Problems Anywhere that you

Jerremy:

listen to podcasts and on all the socials, I would love for people to reach out and

Jerremy:

connect with me on, on that podcast so we can continue grow, growing the platform,

Jerremy:

helping people see, know, and understand how we can all be a part of the solution.

Jerremy:

How education is going to be the root fix for almost everything that we are

Jerremy:

struggling over, and that we worry over.

Jerremy:

Because the more we educate, the more we are aware, the more we are aware,

Jerremy:

the more we can have a an extreme clear path on where to go to how to fix it.

Jerremy:

And we love having guests on the show.

Jerremy:

It was an absolute honor and privilege to meet you, and I am quite confident

Jerremy:

that we'll see each other when I pop up to Rhode Island in a month from now.

Robyn Ivy:

Yeah, I am looking forward to it and I really appreciate the chance

Robyn Ivy:

to guest, host on here and hang out with you guys and share the message.

Robyn Ivy:

I think it's a really beautiful opportunity to speak into wholeness

Robyn Ivy:

because it's not it's no different if it's money or if it's your faith,

Robyn Ivy:

or it's your relationship or your marriage or the way you parent, or

Robyn Ivy:

the way you wanna serve our community.

Robyn Ivy:

If we're not all in this together, then we're really not gonna make this happen.

Jerremy:

That's right.

Robyn Ivy:

Thank you for this.

Show artwork for Solving America's Problems

About the Podcast

Solving America's Problems
Solving America’s Problems isn’t just a podcast—it’s a journey. Co-host Jerremy Newsome, a successful entrepreneur and educator, is pursuing his lifelong dream of running for president. Along the way, he and co-host Dave Conley bring together experts, advocates, and everyday Americans to explore the real, actionable solutions our country needs.

With dynamic formats—one-on-one interviews, panel discussions, and more—we cut through the noise of divisive rhetoric to uncover practical ideas that unite instead of divide. If you’re ready to think differently, act boldly, and join a movement for meaningful change, subscribe now.